The best smart phone accessory money can buy.
Remember when, if you wanted a new phone, your choices were
wall-mount or tabletop? Oh, sure, you may have had some color options, but guys
solved that easily enough by just grabbing the top box on the pile and then
whistling happily all the way to the check-out counter.
The damn phone
stayed at home where it belonged and you went in the house and used it when you
needed to. It didn’t follow you around everywhere you went like a homesick
puppy…(“And this is where you activate ‘bathroom mode’ so you can use it in the
shower.”) It didn’t pester and badger you or make strange noises when you were
trying to set the hook on a lunker bass. It didn’t buzz and vibrate in your
pants at the exact moment a trophy buck stopped broadside twenty yards from your
tree stand. When you were camped out in the mountains ten miles from the
trailhead you could look into the flames of the campfire or gaze up at the
stars at night instead of sticking your nose up to a little glowing screen.
There were a
few occasions when a smart phone might have come in handy for an outdoorsman.
But, since you didn’t have one, you didn’t know you needed some obscure app, so you just shrugged and got on with life
and found a way to make do without it. This may come as a shock to Gen X, but
mankind survived and thrived and was actually aware of its physical
surroundings throughout the centuries with no ill effects without being
permanently attached to an electronic phone. Hundreds of generations of people
lived out their entire lives quite happily and successfully without ever
texting, Tweeting, Googling or updating their status.
I was secretly
very glad when we lived over in Granite
County. Mountainous and
sparsely-populated, maybe 10 percent…12 tops…of the entire county had any kind
of cell coverage, so I was spared the “joys” of owning a smart phone. My loving
wife did get me a trac phone that permanently resided in the glovebox of my
pickup truck. Two or three times a year, an occasion might arise when it would
be useful. At such times, I would whip the trac phone out of the glove
compartment, turn it on, and have just enough juice to indeed confirm that
there was no cell coverage where I was at before the battery died completely. I
would make do without it, re-charge it when I got home, and toss it back in the
glovebox for another three or four months, at which time I would complete the
same cycle all over again. I don’t think I used the initial 90 minutes of call
time in the decade I had it. I was more than happy with this arrangement.
Eight years
ago we moved and wound up in a county that is cursed with some astronomically
good cell coverage for Montana,
something like 65 or maybe even 70%. My wife insisted it was high time I join
the rest of the industrial world and I was forced, at gunpoint, to accept the
smart phone of her choice. Olivia is very tech-savvy and does her best to
educate me about these things. I really am grateful for her tech-support; with
the children grown up and gone and out on their own I can’t ask them to help me
with computer issues when they get home from school.
As a writer, I have learned a bit
about computers over the years since I find them extremely useful, especially
considering that I originally taught myself to type as a kid on Mom’s old
manual Remington typewriter. With phones, on the other hand, I was just fine
with the status quo. If I needed to call someone, I walked in the house and
called them. If the phone rang when I was actually in the house, I answered it.
If not, I checked the answering machine when I got back. The only phone
technology that impressed me over the decades was getting rid of the rotary
dial, going cordless, and caller ID so I could, at a glance, choose whether or
not to answer the phone and swear at the RNC or simply ignore their call
altogether. That was progress.
At first, I tried to resist the smart
phone.
“It’s not that hard,” my wife would
insist. “My Mom learned to use hers just fine, except for disabling that
‘random and inappropriate emoji generator’.”
“There’s one big difference,” I would
reply. “Your Mom wanted to learn to
use hers.”
“Oh, for Heaven’s sake. At least let
me show you how to use to 3-D Topographic Terrain Holograph app. As an
outdoorsman you’ll love it!”
So she would take me through the 158
simple steps required to use the app. A few days later, I would try to actually
use the thing and get lost around Step #23. She would come home to find me
crouched down behind the cover of my recliner, peeking around one side and
poking at the smart phone on the floor with a stick.
One evening a few years back,
however, my wife insisted on cooking supper, a meal which made me suddenly
extremely drowsy. When I woke up, I was tied to a chair and my new Uber-Fhon
was chained to my wrist. The little wife, God bless her, made a heroic effort
to educate me on all of its functions. After about the first 372, my eyes
unfocused and glazed over and my mouth fell open and began to emit a long
streamer of drool. She just set the Uber-Fhon to “underwater mode”, threw a
five-gallon bucket of ice water on me, and kept right on going. Only by
convincingly feigning death for a quarter of an hour was I able to escape
unharmed.
The new Uber-Fhon
has, by my count, some 9,347,332 separate functions, gizmos, devices, apps,
widgets, accessories, contrivances, contraptions, doo-dads and thingamajigs. There’s
even a corckscrew that folds down out of a little niche like on a Swiss Army
knife. Of these, I’ve found, at best, four that are marginally useful and maybe
two that I actually use. Even on those rare occasions when I finally do try to
use them, I wind up using my fist as a hammer because the touch screen refuses
to recognize my calloused finger as a human appendage and after the first three
or four dozen unsuccessful swipes my patience begins to wear thin.
I think Uber-Fhon hates me as much as
I hate it and does little things just to annoy me. For instance, when I pick it
up and look at it, it instantly begins to defy gravity and spatial orientation
so that no matter how I hold it the writing on the screen is always upside
down. If I try to text, it immediately shrinks the keyboard buttons down to
such a small size I can only hit the letter on either side of the one I’m
aiming for. When, after muttering and back-spacing umpteen times, I finally type
in the word I wanted, auto-correct kicks in and changes it to something
completely different and totally unrelated. I usually don’t notice that my
painstakingly constructed sentence has morphed into utter gibberish until the
moment after I’ve hit the send button. What the duck, Uber-Fhon? I finally
found it easier to capture and train a chickadee to peck out texts for me with
its tiny little bill.
Miffed at being outsmarted thusly,
Uber-Fhon sought revenge by constantly introducing itself as Skynet and asking
me for the nuclear launch ‘go’ codes every time I tried to use it and then,
late at night, waking me up by staring at me with an unblinking red light and lisping
in its creepy HAL voice, “What are you doing, Bawb?”
"What are you doing, Bawb?"
The other day
my wife came home to find my Uber-Fhon tied to a chair. Wearing a monocle and
jabbing what I hoped were the phone’s short ribs with the muzzle of a loaded
Walther P-38, I was snarling at it in my best Major Hochstetter accent, “Ve
haff vays of making you talk!”
“What on earth
are you trying to do?” She asked.
“Make a phone
call.”
“Oh, I’ll show
you that one more time. But first, real quick, you need to know that this icon
will take you into the set-up menu so you can take pictures and videos.”
“I have a
camera for that.”
“What about
the weather? Before you go hunting wouldn’t you like to check the weather
first?
“I do. I look
out that window.”
“But it’s so
easy. You just push this button, swipe this image, enter your password, erect
the dish array, connect to the network, wait until this red dot turns green,
get three sonar pings, hit this icon, enter the combination 12-4-732, activate
the HUD, and voila…it will tell you
if there is a hazardous weather outlook anywhere in the Northern Hemisphere!
Simple.”
“Or I could just
look out the window.”
“Well,
technically you could. But now you don’t need to go through all that bother.”
“What bother?
Turning my head?”
“Now just let
me just show you how to use the GPS Waypoint-Finder Navigational Beacon System
real quick…”
“I just want
to make a damn phone call.”
“Oh. Uber-Fhon
doesn’t actually do that. I’d need to buy and install a new app. Hey! Where are
you going?”
“To throw Uber-Fhon in the truck
glovebox for the next five months and then go make the call on the land line,
like I always end up doing. I just wish it was a wall-mount instead of a
desktop.”
2 comments:
I'm still on 3G bitty little (non smart) phone you can easily pocket, but my resistance to advancing to this new century is wearing thin. So many cool apps that come in handy and here I am back in stone ages. Prices have come way down and plans are far more reasonable than before, its likely just a matter of time.
What keeps me away - becoming a phone zombie. So many people I see seated at a table but all of them staring at their phones rather then engaging each other face to face. All purposely ignoring one another. Weird !
You had me rolling!! Oh I can so hear the responses!! Poor Olivia!
How about OnX maps?? I have not been down there in a couple of years, but sounds like the coverage has improved some.
Stay safe and warm!!
-Mark
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